by dtc » Sun Dec 06, 2015 11:34 pm
The foam board looks ok and might be worth it while you learn ie your first 6 month or 80 hours or so. However, as a longer term board foamies aren't that great - they are heavy, don't turn very well, you have limited fin selection and the fins are usually not great (eg you screw them in through the foam, so they aren't very solid). Foam boards are good at one thing - limiting injuries, particularly in crowded areas eg surf schools...(this is why surf school use them, not because they really assist in developing skills, but because they assist in not injuring the participants when everyone is crowded together without knowing what to do). Foamies aren't great in terms of every thing else. For $160 it might be worth it, and you can always keep the board for friends when you have progressed
A 'proper' board is not so good in crowds, until you have the control skills, but otherwise offer far greater advantages - turning, tuning your fins, your board will rarely limit your skills or development. So this is a much better long term choice, but the benefits really start accruing after you have a modicum of skills (can catch a wave, pop up and starting to learn a bottom turn). If you bought a foam board, you will end up buying a longboard anyway.
However, its very definitely possible to learn on a regular longboard and most people do this. The foamie is only a safety stage, if its something you think is relevant ie you think you might hit yourself or someone else with your board because everywhere is crowded. But presumably its possible to find somewhere not crowded.
If you intend to surf seriously, get a proper board. If you just want to dabble and try now and then, a foam board is a reasonable choice.
At 195lbs I would really suggest going to 9ft or even 9ft6. There is no real benefit of 8ft - its not short enough to add significant manoeuvrability over a 9ft board, but its just short enough not to offer the additional volume and ease of a 9ft+ board.